Drug Rehab in Raleigh, North Carolina

Outpatient rehab, medication-assisted treatment, and dual diagnosis care across Raleigh, Cary and Chapel Hill. Morning and evening programs available.

Medically reviewed by Meaghan Brackin, MS, LCMHC, LCAS, CRC, Manager of Substance Use Services

Last updated: May, 2026

 

At AIM, our drug rehab in North Carolina focuses on helping you safely reduce or stop use, and then giving you the strategies, medications, and structure needed to maintain that progress and build something more stable over time.

Evidence-Based Drug Addiction Treatment in Raleigh

Effective drug addiction treatment usually requires more than one type of support.

 

Most people aren’t just dealing with substance use on its own. Cravings, stress, mental health symptoms, and daily habits all tend to interact. When those are treated separately, it becomes harder to tell what’s actually helping and what isn’t.

 

Many people looking for drug rehab are not just trying to stop using. They’re trying to get back to a place where daily life feels more stable and manageable.

 

At AIM, treatment is built around that reality.

 

Care typically includes:

 

 

These parts are intentionally connected, so changes in one area support progress in others, rather than working against each other.

Evidence-Based Drug Addiction Treatment in Raleigh

Types of Drug Addiction We Treat

Different substances create different patterns of dependence, withdrawal, and recovery. Treatment that works for opioid use isn’t the same as treatment for stimulants or benzodiazepines. At AIM, your care plan is built around the substance and the patterns you’re actually dealing with.

 

Opioids — including heroin, fentanyl, and prescription painkillers like oxycodone or hydrocodone. Treatment typically involves Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT), including Suboxone, to reduce cravings and stabilize withdrawal, combined with therapy and ongoing psychiatric support.

 

Stimulants — including cocaine, methamphetamine, and prescription stimulants like Adderall or Ritalin used outside of medical guidance. There’s no FDA-approved medication for stimulant use disorder, so treatment focuses on behavioral therapy, identifying triggers, and addressing mental health symptoms that often drive use.

 

Benzodiazepines — including Xanax, Klonopin, Ativan, and Valium. Benzo dependence requires a slow, medically supervised taper. Our psychiatrists manage taper schedules while therapy addresses the anxiety or trauma patterns that often led to use in the first place.

 

Marijuana — high-frequency or high-potency cannabis use can interfere with motivation, sleep, anxiety, and mental health, especially in younger adults. Treatment is therapy-led and often involves dual diagnosis care.

 

Polysubstance use — many people aren’t using just one substance. Our team builds plans that account for combined use rather than treating one drug at a time.

 

If you’re struggling with alcohol alongside drug use, we treat both together.

Types of Drug Addiction We Treat

Signs You May Need Drug Rehab

Most people don’t reach out the first time use becomes a problem. The signs build slowly, and it’s easy to talk yourself out of needing help — until something forces the question.

 

A few patterns that tend to indicate it’s time to get support:

 

  • You’ve tried to cut back or stop and couldn’t stay consistent
  • You’re using more, or more often, than you planned to
  • Use is starting to affect work, school, relationships, or daily responsibilities
  • You experience withdrawal symptoms — physical or emotional — when you don’t use
  • You’re hiding use from people close to you
  • Anxiety, depression, or trauma symptoms have gotten worse alongside use
  • Past attempts to stop (on your own, with a friend, with weekly therapy) haven’t held

 

If several of these feel familiar, a conversation doesn’t commit you to anything. Our team can help you figure out whether outpatient care is the right level of support, or whether something else needs to happen first.

Signs You May Need Drug Rehab

AIM’s Outpatient Drug Rehab Programs in Raleigh

Recovery doesn’t happen in a single setting or at a single point in time. It tends to move through phases, with different needs at each stage.

 

Early on, the focus may be stabilization. Later, it shifts toward maintaining progress and building a life that doesn’t revolve around substance use.

 

At AIM, treatment is built around that progression.

 

Instead of a fixed program, care is adjusted based on what you need at a given time, with the ability to step up or step down as things change.

 

Treatment options include:

 

  • Medication support to reduce cravings and withdrawal symptoms
  • PHP and IOP programs to provide structure and consistency during the week
  • Ongoing therapy and psychiatry to support long-term stability and mental health

 

Each of these plays a role within a broader system of care, rather than functioning as isolated services.

AIM’s Outpatient Drug Rehab Programs in Raleigh

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) and Suboxone

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) is often used to reduce cravings and stabilize withdrawal, especially for opioid use.

 

Options may include Suboxone or other medications depending on your situation.

 

At AIM, medication is used to create a foundation. It helps reduce the intensity of cravings and withdrawal so you can engage more fully in the rest of treatment.

 

It’s one part of a larger process, not the end point.

 

Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP) for Addiction

PHP is typically used when more structure is needed early on.

It involves full-day programming during the week, including therapy, group work, and psychiatric support.

This level of care is often where initial stability is built, especially when substance use has been more consistent or difficult to interrupt.

<h3>Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) and Suboxone</h3>

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) for Addiction

IOP is often appropriate when substance use is difficult to manage without consistent support, but inpatient or full-day care isn’t necessary.

 

This may include ongoing cravings, difficulty staying consistent with sobriety, or patterns of use that continue to disrupt work, relationships, or daily responsibilities.

 

Treatment typically involves multiple sessions throughout the week, allowing you to address challenges as they come up, rather than trying to manage them alone between appointments.

 

This level of care can be a starting point for many people, or a step up when weekly therapy hasn’t been enough to create consistent progress.

 

The focus is on building stability in real time, while still allowing you to remain engaged in your day-to-day life.

<h3>Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) for Addiction</h3>

Outpatient Therapy and Psychiatry for Drug Use

Outpatient therapy and psychiatry can be a starting point or a way to maintain progress, depending on what you’re dealing with.

 

Some people begin here when substance use is still manageable but starting to create problems. Others use it after more structured treatment to stay consistent and prevent things from slipping.

 

This level of care includes individual therapy and medication management, with a focus on understanding patterns, managing stress, and responding to triggers before they escalate.

 

For many, it becomes an ongoing support that helps keep recovery stable while continuing to work, maintain relationships, and build structure in daily life.

<h3>Outpatient Therapy and Psychiatry for Drug Use</h3>

Where AIM Fits If You Need Detox First

Detox is sometimes the right first step, especially with opioids, benzodiazepines, or heavy long-term use. But detox on its own rarely holds. What happens in the weeks and months after — therapy, medication, structure, dual diagnosis care — is what determines whether progress lasts.

 

That’s where AIM comes in.

 

If you’re not sure whether you need medical detox, our team can assess your situation: the level of use, the risk of withdrawal, and whether outpatient support is enough or whether a higher level of care is needed first. In some cases, medication and close monitoring can manage milder withdrawal without a full detox program. When inpatient detox is needed, we coordinate referrals to trusted partners and pick up your care the moment you’re ready for outpatient treatment, so the transition doesn’t fall on you.

 

AIM does not provide inpatient or medical detox in-house. We provide everything that comes after — and we help you find the right starting point if detox needs to happen first.

Where AIM Fits If You Need Detox First

What Level of Care is Right for You?

The right level of care depends on how difficult it is to stay consistent with reducing or stopping use.

 

For some people, substance use is still manageable with the right support. For others, cravings, withdrawal, or daily patterns make it harder to follow through without more structure.

 

We look at how substance use is showing up in your day-to-day life to determine what level of support will actually help.

 

This typically includes:

 

  • Whether you’re able to reduce or stop use on your own
  • How often cravings or urges are showing up
  • Whether withdrawal symptoms are a concern
  • How substance use is impacting work, relationships, or daily responsibilities
  • What’s happened in past attempts to cut back or stop
  • Whether your current environment is helping or making it harder
  • How mental health conditions are influencing drug use.

 

Based on this, treatment may start with:

 

  • Outpatient therapy and psychiatry when symptoms are more manageable
  • Intensive Outpatient (IOP) when consistency has been difficult without frequent support
  • Partial Hospitalization (PHP) when more structure is needed to stabilize early on

 

The goal is to match you with a level of care that gives you enough support to make progress, without adding more than you actually need.

What Level of Care is Right for You?

Dual Diagnosis Providers for Drug Addiction Treatment

For many people, anxiety, depression, trauma, or other mental health patterns are part of what’s driving or maintaining substance use. Treating one without the other often leads to short-term progress that doesn’t hold.

 

Our team includes therapists and psychiatrists with experience in both substance use and mental health. This allows us to treat these issues together, rather than trying to separate them.

 

You’re matched with a provider who understands how these patterns interact in your day-to-day life, and treatment is adjusted based on what’s actually happening, not just a fixed plan.

 

Medication, therapy, and programs like IOP or PHP are all used as part of the same approach, so care stays aligned and progress is easier to maintain.

Dual Diagnosis Providers for Drug Addiction Treatment

Get Started with Drug Addiction Treatment in Raleigh

If drug use is starting to affect your daily life, getting the right support early can make a difference.

 

Our team can help you understand what’s going on and determine what level of care is most appropriate.

 

Call us or complete a form to get started.

Get Started with Drug Addiction Treatment in Raleigh

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Our Team

At the core of AIM is our dedicated team, focused on fostering an environment where optimal wellbeing is achievable.

 

A Team Committed to Your Wellbeing

 

Driven by a vision of accessible, compassionate healthcare, our diverse professionals bring unique expertise and insights to enhance our mission. We believe in the power of connection and collaborative care. From clinical experts to supportive staff, every team member contributes to creating a nurturing environment that promotes growth, healing, and comprehensive wellbeing.

Drug Addiction Treatment FAQs

Does AIM offer Suboxone for opioid use disorder?

Yes. We offer Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT), including Suboxone, as part of a broader treatment plan.

Does AIM offer detox?

No. We do not provide medical detox, but we can help coordinate referrals and support transition into outpatient care after detox is complete.

What drugs does AIM treat addiction for?

We treat a range of substance use disorders, including opioids, alcohol, stimulants, and other commonly used substances.

Does AIM treat addiction and mental health together?

Yes. Many individuals experience both at the same time, and treatment is designed to address both in a coordinated way.

What therapy approaches does AIM use in IOP?

IOP typically includes evidence-based approaches such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), and other skills-based interventions focused on managing triggers and building stability.